77697452
.pdfSUMMARY
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The present book, entitled "The Period of Classical Islam in the Caucasus. Abu Bakr |
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ad-Darbandi and his Sufi Encyclopaedia Rayhan al-Haqa'iq", is based on the significant and |
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still unpublished Arabic source Rayhan al-Haqa'iq wa-Bustan ad-Daqa'iq ("The Basil of |
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Truths and the Garden of Subtleties") written by Abu Bakr Muhammad b. Musa b. al-Faraj ad- |
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Darbandi (d. 539/1145) in the |
late 11th and |
the early 12th |
century. In |
Muslim biographical |
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literature he is also known as Muhammad ash-Shirwani. A contemporary of Abu Hamid al- |
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Ghazali, Abu Bakr ad-Darbandi was born in Bab al-abwab, one of the biggest Islamic centers in |
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the Caucasus, but he later lived in Baghdad and traveled between Mecca, Medina, Isfahan, |
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Hamadan, Amul, Qazwin, etc. Being a Shafi'i and Ash'ari, he was closely connected with |
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madrasas an-Nizamiya in Tabaristan and Baghdad. Ad-Darbandi's teachers were Abu Ghalib al- |
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Fami al-Baqillani (d. 500/1106), Abu'l-Mahasin ar-Ru'yani |
(d. 502/1108), al-Kiya al-Harrasi |
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(d. 504/1110), Abu'l-Muzaffar |
al-Abiwardi |
(d. 507/1113), |
Abu 'Abd |
Allah |
al-Humaydi |
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(d. 488/1095), Ibn al-Qaysarani al-Maqdisi (d. 507/1113), Shirawayh b. Shahridar al-Hamadani |
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(d. 509/1115) and other famous scholars. Among his disciples mentioned in the manuscript are |
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4Imad ad-din Abu Ja'far Muhammad ad-Danishi (d. 525/1131) from Tabaristan, Abu Sa'd as- |
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Sam'ani (d. 562/1167), the author of the Kitab al-Ansab, and Abu Tahir as-Silafi (d. 576/1180), |
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later known as a brilliant traditionalist in Egypt. |
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The Rayhan al-Haqa'iq is the most important source on classical Islam in the Caucasus |
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(496 pages, with 28-32 lines per page, written in small script, predominantly without diacritical |
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marks); it can be viewed as quite indispensable in understanding local Muslim communities in |
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the Middle Ages. The writing belongs to moderate Sufism, greatly influenced by al-malamatiya |
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tradition. Having been kept in the Daghestan academic collection in a unique manuscript of the |
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14th century, it has so far remained practically unknown. Its importance lies in the fact that it |
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was written in the formation period of Sufism development, of which only a few sources have |
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survived. |
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The analysis of ad-Darbandi's work throws new light upon intellectual and spiritual life in |
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the Caucasus in the 10t h - 12th centuries. To revise some historical data and certain names of |
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people and places, the author turned to manuscripts of the local chronicle Darband-nama, Zayn |
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al-'Abidin Shirwani's Bustan as-Siyahat, and al-Mas'udi's Muruj az-Zahab, etc. This made it |
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possible to reveal facts concerning the ethnic and religious history of the Caucasian peoples, |
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including their relationships with the Ghunnes, Avars, Khazars, Iranians, Arabs, Russes, etc. |
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The historical part of the research includes new data on the Caucasian Caliphate frontier system, |
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traced back to the Sassanid period and known as Darpush. Among the unpublished materials on |
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which the research is based, the manuscript of the anonymous Risale-yi Babiye, written in |
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Osman Turkish with many Arabic and Persian insertions, should be mentioned. The book also |
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includes medieval Arabic inscriptions discovered by the author himself during his expeditions to |
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the region. |
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Abu Bakr ad-Darbandi displays a deep insight into the political and cultural development of |
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the Caliphate under the Great Seljuqs. It was a period of intense cultural activity and political |
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turmoil, vivid spiritual discussions, and close interaction |
between scholars |
belonging to |
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various religious schools and teachings. Ad-Darbandi was closely associated with al-Bakri |